Furnace Duct Cleaning Cost in New York: What You’ll Actually Pay for a Retrofit System
Furnace duct cleaning in New York typically runs $450 to $1,200 for a complete system, depending on whether your ductwork was purpose-built or retrofitted into an older building. For a detailed breakdown, see our How Much Does HVAC Cleaning Cost? (2026 Price Guide) — New York, NY. Most jobs we handle in Manhattan and Brooklyn brownstones fall in the $650–$900 range. Call (833) 754-6107 for a free estimate — Richard Anderson, our owner and lead technician, will assess your system in person and give you an exact number.
About half the brownstones we work in have a furnace that was installed in the last 20 years on top of a building that’s 100 years old. The ducts were run through closets, under floors, and through spaces the original architect never intended for airflow. That’s not a complaint — it’s just reality, and it means “furnace duct cleaning” in New York is a different job than it is in a 1990s suburb with a utility room and straight runs.
Why NYC Furnace Duct Cleaning Costs More Than the National Average
The internet will tell you furnace duct cleaning costs $300–$500. That might hold true in a Phoenix ranch house with a slab foundation and a single straight trunk line. In New York, those numbers are fiction.
We’ve spent two decades cleaning ducts in pre-war walk-ups in the West Village, converted brownstones in Park Slope, and high-rise condos in Long Island City. The common thread? Almost none of these buildings were designed for forced-air heating. The furnace got shoehorned in where space allowed, and the ductwork followed whatever path was available — around structural beams, through former coal chutes, between floor joists with 14-inch clearances.
This matters for your bill because:
- Inaccessible runs take longer. When we can’t access a main trunk line from a basement utility room, we’re working with sectional access points, flexible rods, and rotary brush systems that need to be fed and retrieved at multiple points. A 45-minute job in a suburban home becomes a 3-hour job in a Fort Greene brownstone.
- Retrofit ducts collect differently. Tight turns and low-velocity runs cause debris to pack in corners that straight ducts don’t have. Our home equipment — Nikro and Rotobrush systems with variable-speed drives — lets us adjust torque and brush aggression for these conditions, but the work is more involved.
- Shared utility spaces require care. NYC furnaces in older buildings frequently share a closet with water heaters and gas lines. Richard has the experience to work safely in these tight, multi-system spaces that a first-year subcontractor should not.
We’ve seen crews rush these jobs in 90 minutes, blow out a quick patch of visible duct, and call it done. That’s not how we operate. When we quote a furnace duct cleaning, we’re quoting contact cleaning — every surface the air touches gets brushed, vacuumed, and inspected.
What’s Included in a Full Furnace Duct Cleaning
At Landmark, our HVAC Duct Cleaning Service in New York, NY means the complete air-handling system, not just the visible registers. Here’s what we actually clean:
| Component | What’s Done | Typical Time |
|---|---|---|
| Supply trunk lines | Rotary brush contact cleaning with HEPA vacuum extraction | 1–2 hrs |
| Return trunk lines | Same, plus filter housing inspection | 45 min – 1.5 hrs |
| Branch runs to registers | Per-vent cleaning with whip or brush system | 30–60 min |
| Furnace cabinet & blower wheel | Removed, cleaned, balanced check | 45–75 min |
| Heat exchanger visual | Inspection for corrosion or breach indicators | 15 min |
| Filter housing & frame | Cleaned, filter replaced (customer-supplied or ours) | 15 min |
The furnace cabinet cleaning is not a separate line item for us — it’s part of a complete system job. Some competitors quote duct cleaning at $400, then add $200 for the blower wheel and another $150 for the cabinet. We don’t do that. When Richard Anderson — owner and lead technician — gives you a number, it’s for the work your system actually needs.
We also integrate with existing air quality systems where they’re present. If you have a Honeywell or Aprilaire whole-house purifier or humidifier mounted on your ductwork, we’ll inspect, clean, and note any maintenance needs as part of the service. No second contractor required.
Real Price Ranges for New York Buildings
These are actual ranges from jobs we’ve completed in the last 18 months. Your building type is the biggest cost driver:
| Building Type | System Description | Typical Cost Range |
|---|---|---|
| 2BR ground-floor apartment (pre-war) | Retrofit furnace, 6–8 registers, limited basement access | $450 – $650 |
| 3-story brownstone, owner-occupied | Retrofit furnace with multiple zone runs, 12–18 registers | $750 – $1,100 |
| 3-story brownstone, rental units | Same as above, plus higher debris load, possible pest evidence | $900 – $1,200 |
| High-rise condo, 2BR | Central building HVAC with in-unit fan coil; limited duct scope | $350 – $550 |
| Commercial kitchen + office (small) | Grease-laden return system, requires pre-solvent and extended vacuum | $1,000 – $1,500 |
The brownstone numbers deserve extra attention. We’ve done jobs in Prospect Heights where the furnace was installed in a former coal bin with 5-foot headroom, and the main trunk ran through a crawl space under the parlor floor. That job took 4.5 hours and cost $980. We’ve also done brownstones in Bed-Stuy where a more accessible basement conversion let us finish in 2.5 hours for $720. Same square footage, different architecture, different price.
Our HVAC Cleaning page covers full system cleaning for buildings with central chilled-water or VRF systems — different equipment, different pricing structure.
What Separates a Proper Job from a Cheap One
We’ve been called in after “$299 whole-house specials” that left customers with scratched ductwork, blown dust through the house, and a furnace blower that rattled because it was never removed for cleaning. Here’s what we look for when assessing whether a previous job was done right — and what we guarantee on our own work:
- Negative pressure containment. The system should be under vacuum while brushes are agitating debris. If dust is escaping into your living space, the equipment isn’t sealed properly. Our Abatement Technologies portable HEPA units maintain containment even in buildings with no basement access.
- Blower wheel removal. You cannot clean a blower wheel properly in place. It comes out, gets brushed and vacuumed, and goes back balanced. Period.
- Before/after documentation. We photograph accessible trunk lines and the furnace cabinet. You see what was there. This isn’t for marketing — it’s for your records and for our quality check.
- No chemical fogging as a substitute for mechanical cleaning. Sanitizing has its place (we offer it), but it doesn’t remove packed debris. Brushes and vacuum do the removal. Chemicals are a finishing step, not a shortcut.
Richard grew up in Woodside, Queens, a few blocks from the elevated 7 train, and has spent the last 20 years cleaning air ducts in just about every type of building New York throws at you — pre-war walk-ups, high-rise condos, commercial kitchens, you name it. He learned the mechanical side of HVAC systems at New York City College of Technology in Brooklyn, where hands-on coursework gave him a foundation that held up a lot better than the sheet metal in some of the ducts he’s pulled apart since. That pattern recognition matters when he’s quoting your job. He’s seen your building’s configuration before, even if he hasn’t seen your specific address.
When Furnace Duct Cleaning Becomes Duct Repair
Sometimes we open a system and find damage that cleaning alone won’t fix — disconnected flex runs, corroded trunk lines, or failed sealing tape that’s been leaking conditioned air into wall cavities for years. We handle HVAC Cleaning in New York and duct repair as part of our scope, so there’s no handoff to another contractor.
Common issues we flag during furnace duct cleaning:
- Failed flex connections at the furnace plenum. High heat cycles degrade the connection tape. We re-secure with proper mechanical fasteners and UL-rated sealant.
- Corroded galvanized trunk lines in humid basements. Common in buildings near the Gowanus Canal or other low-lying areas with groundwater intrusion. We repair or replace sections as needed.
- Undersized returns choking the blower. Retrofit systems often have return paths that were adequate for the original furnace but not the replacement. We note this and can recommend solutions.
We won’t sell you repair work you don’t need. “I’ll tell you what you need. I won’t sell you what you don’t.” That’s how Richard built this business — 548 reviews, 4.9 stars, almost entirely from word-of-mouth in neighborhoods like Astoria, Williamsburg, and Washington Heights.
How to Prepare for Your Estimate
You don’t need to do much. We’ll ask:
- When was the furnace installed, and by whom? (Permit history helps us understand the retrofit quality.)
- When were ducts last cleaned, if ever?
- Any recent renovations that generated dust?
- Allergy or odor complaints that prompted the call?
- Access to basement, utility closet, or roof mechanical room?
Richard handles the estimate personally — not a sales rep, not a scheduler who passes you to a crew you’ve never met. The person who assesses your system does the work. That’s unusual in this trade, and it’s why our customers in New York know exactly who they’re getting.
FAQs
Most complete furnace duct cleaning jobs in New York City range from $450 to $1,200, with the majority falling between $650 and $900 for typical residential systems. Brownstones and pre-war buildings with retrofit ductwork trend toward the higher end due to access challenges and longer cleaning times. Call (833) 754-6107 for a free, exact quote — Richard Anderson assesses every job in person.
No — and it’s not effective either. The furnace blower wheel and cabinet are where the most concentrated debris collects; cleaning ducts without addressing the source just recontaminates the system on the next cycle. At Landmark, furnace cabinet cleaning is included in our complete system price, not sold as an upsell.
Retrofit systems in pre-war buildings typically take 3 to 5 hours for a thorough job, compared to 2 to 3 hours in newer construction with straight, accessible duct runs. The time difference comes from navigating tight access points, working around structural obstacles, and ensuring contact cleaning in sections where we can’t visually inspect. We schedule accordingly and don’t rush — a half-cleaned system is worse than none at all.
We do not disturb asbestos-containing materials. If your ductwork has asbestos wrap or insulation, we’ll identify it during assessment and refer you to a licensed abatement contractor before proceeding with cleaning. Many pre-1980 buildings in New York have this issue, and proper handling is non-negotiable for safety and legal compliance. We can resume duct cleaning once abatement is complete.
Ready to Get an Exact Number for Your System?
Online price ranges only go so far — your building’s specific duct configuration, access points, and furnace condition determine the actual cost. Richard Anderson, Owner & Lead Technician at Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service New York, will assess your system in person and give you a firm, no-surprise quote. Call (833) 754-6107 today to schedule your free estimate, or find HVAC Cleaning Near Me in New York, NY to see our service area. Most inspections take 20 minutes, and we can often complete the cleaning the same day if you’re ready to move forward.
Written by Richard Anderson, Owner & Lead Technician at Landmark Air Duct Cleaning Service New York, serving New York, NY.